The plot is a bit predictable and a bit of a pot boiler through which I struggled but there are a host of enjoyable characters:
- Agatha the lord of the manor's raped daughter who becomes a beguine and uses her intelligence to question even the sacrament;
- Servant Martha, the head of the beguinage, who feels the weight of her responsibilities;
- Healing Martha, the nurse; (and Kitchen Martha, the cook, and Merchant Martha, the saleswoman, and Tutor Martha, the teacher, and Shepherd Martha, the shepherdess, and another Marhta I've forgotten because there are supposed to be seven)
- Beatrice, a beguine whose married life ended after a string of still-births and whose bitterness eats away at her;
- Pega, ex trollope, now a beguine, very free with love;
- Father Ulfrid, who has been exiled to this miserable village after being caught with his boyfriend. Father U is one of the more interesting characters because he is sometimes a goody, very much on the side of the down-trodden villagers, and sometimes a pathetic weakling, besotted by his lover and scared of discovery, and sometimes the blackest of black-hearted villains;
- as opposed to Phillip, nephew of the Lord of the Manor, who is supposed to be the blackest of black-hearted villains but who is so black he is reduced to caricature.
It was all right but I'd rather have read something else.
February 2010; 550 pages
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